There's a new player suiting up for the NFL season — one with the potential to affect almost every play.
It's
the Microsoft Surface, which made its on-field debut during the
preseason game between the Buffalo Bills and New York Giants on Sunday.
The
Surface tablets will make it easier for teams to review plays on the
fly. Currently, the NFL uses sideline cameras to capture action; those
photos are then relayed to a printer, where someone takes the printouts,
stuffs them in a binder, and runs them to the coaches. Even with black
and white photos, the process takes about 30 seconds minimum, according
to a Microsoft blog post about the partnership.
Clearly,
there is a lot of room for high-tech improvement. With special Surface
Pro 2 tablets connected to a private Wi-Fi network at the stadium, those
same photos can get to the coaches' hands just a few seconds after the
play happens. The photos are also in full color; the players and coaches
will be able to zoom in on details and even annotate the pictures with a
digital pen.
What they won't be able to do is tweet or check email.
The
heavily modified Surface tablets can only run essentially one app: the
Sideline Viewing System (SVS). Even the cameras are disabled, Bloomberg
reports.
The
device lockdown is partly to keep things simple, but also to ensure the
devices adhere to NFL regulations, which prohibit computers of any kind
on the sidelines. That's the reason the photo process has been so
decidedly low-tech for so long, and Microsoft worked with the NFL to
ensure the Surfaces were scrubbed of anything that could lend an unfair
advantage to either team.
Why
the Surface Pro 2 and not the newer, sleeker Surface Pro 3? Probably
because the deal was in place before the latest model made its debut in
the late spring, and the Surface Pro 2 is physically modified, too; it
has a thicker bezel to ensure it will stand up to the punishment of the
NFL season.
You'd
think that if the NFL was prioritizing durability, it would have chosen
a Panasonic ToughPad or something similar, but remember — there are
marketing dollars here at work, too. The Surface's game day arrival is
rooted in a partnership between Microsoft and the NFL, which began last
year. Microsoft also debuted new NFL apps for Xbox and Windows 8 just in
time for the start of the preseason.
Posted by : Gizemon
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